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59. CHARACTER OF WASHINGTON. Charles Phillips.
(Page 249, Orator's Manual.)

60. DESTINY OF AMERICA. -— - Charles Phillips.
(Page 250, Orator's Manual.)

61. EULOGY ON LAFAYETTE. — Edward Everett.
(Page 251, Orator's Manual.)

62. THE TRUE KINGS OF THE EARTH.-John Ruskin.
(Page 253, Orator's Manual.)

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219. Illustrative: References to man and nature. rule, on objects referred to, use a downward bend or inflection (§ 50), and sometimes the circumflex (§§ 69, 70). These objects should be articulated distinctly, which will tend to make the predominating Terminal stress (§ 101) short and sharp, or change it to Initial (§ 100). When, again, there is much Drift (§ 154), the Terminal will become Median stress (§ 102).

Orotund Quality (§ 135).

66. SUFFERINGS AND DESTINY OF THE PILGRIMS.

Edward Everett.

Methinks I see it now, that one | solitary, | adventurous vèssel, the Mayflower of a forlorn hòpe, freighted with the prospects of a future | státe, and bound across the unknown | sèa. I behold it pursuing, with a thousand misgivings, the uncertain, the tedious m 8 RC up and prone

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voyage. Súns | rise and set, and weeks and months pàss, and win

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ter surprises them on the deep, but brings them not the sight of the

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wished-for shore. I see them nów, scantily | supplied with provisions, crowded almost to suffocation | in their ill-stored prison, de

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layed by calms, pursuing a circuitous route; and now driven in fury h RC pr

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before the raging témpest. on the high and giddy wave. The awful

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voice of the storm hówls through the rìgging; the laboring másts

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seem straining from their base; the dismal sound of the pùmps is 1 LO higher m O m

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heard; the ship léaps, as it were, madly, from billow to billow; the WILC to 1 s ocean breaks, and settles with ingulfing floods over the floating

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deck, and beats, with deadening, shìvering weight, against the staggered vessel. I see them, escaped from these périls, pursuing their all but desperate | undertaking, and landed, at last, after a

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few months' passage, on the ice-clad rocks | of Plymouth,

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weak | and weary | from the voyage, | poorly | ármed, | scantily |

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provisioned, without | shelter, without | méans, surrounded by hostile tribes.

Shut, now, the volume of history, and tell me, on any principle of human probability, what shall be the fate of this handful of ad

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venturers? Tell me, man of military scìence, in how many months

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were they all swept off by the thirty savage tribes enumerated within the early limits of New England. Tell me, politician, how

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lòng did this shadow of a cólony, on which your conventions and

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treaties had not smiled, lànguish on the distant coast? Student of

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hìstory, compare for me the baffled | projects, the deserted | sèttle

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ments, the abandoned | adventures, of òther | times, and find the

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parallel | of this! Was it the winter's stórm, beating upon the houseless heads of women and children? was it hard | labor and spare | méals? was it disease? was it the tómahawk? was it the deep | málady of a blighted | hópe, a rúined | énterprise, and a broken | héart, |áching, in its last | móments, at the recollection of the

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loved and left, beyond the séa?-was it some, or all of these united,

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that hurried this forsaken company to their melancholy fate? And

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is it possible that néither of these causes, that not all | combined,

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were able to blást | this bud | of hópe! Is it possible that from a

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beginning so feèble, so frail, so worthy not so much of admiration

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as of pity, there has gone forth a progress | so steady, a growth | so'

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wonderful, | an expansion | so àmple, a reality | so important, a

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67. NATIONS AND HUMANITY.-G. W. Curtis.

(Page 260, Orator's Manual.)

68. AN APPEAL TO THE PEOPLE. - John Bright.
(Page 262, Orator's Manual.)

DIGNIFIED AND GRAVE.

220. Predominating time slow; pitch low; force moderate (§ 116), effusive (§ 112) and expulsive (§§ 115, 119); stress median (§ 102) and in strong passages terminal (§ 101); quality orotund (§ 135).

69. GALILEO GALILEI.-Edward Everett.*

(P) There is much | in every way | in the city | of Florence | to excite the curiósity, | kindle | the imaginátion, and gratify | the taste; but among all | its fascinations, | addressed to the sénse, the mémory, and the heart, there was none to which I more frequently gave a meditative | hóur, | during a year's | résidence, | than to the

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spot where Galileo | Galilêi | sleeps | beneath the marble | floor | of

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Santa Croce; no building on which I gazed with greater | réverence |

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than I did upon that modest | mansion at Arcêtri; villa once and príson, in which that venerable | sage, | by the command of the In8 C prone

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quisition, passed the sad | clòsing years of his life.

Of all the wonders | of ancient | and modern | árt, statues | and paintings, jewels | and manuscripts, the admiration | and delight | of áges, there was nothing I beheld with more affectionate | áwe |

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than that poor little spy-glass, through which the human eye first | *This Selection belongs in § 219.

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pierced | the clouds | of visual | error, which | from the creation | 8 f LC and drop

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of the world | had involved | the system | of the Universe.

There are occasions in life | in which great | minds | live years of rapt | enjoyment | in a mòment. (O) I can fancy the emotions of

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Galileo, when, first | raising the newly-constructed telescope | change to

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to the heavens, he saw fulfilled the grand | prophecy | of Copêr

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change nicus, and beheld the planet Venus, crèscent like the moon. (A O) It was such another moment as that | when the immortal printers If LO

of Mentz and Strasburg received the first copy of the Bible into 8 LO lift f

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their hands; like that, when Colùmbus, through the gray | dawn

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of the 12th of October, 1492, first beheld the shores of San Salvadown

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dor; like that when Le Verrier received back from Berlin the

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tidings that the predicted planet was found.

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Bigots may make thee recánt it; but it moves | still. (AO) Yès,

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w to tr RC the earth | mòves; and the plànets move; and the mighty waters

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move; and the great sweeping | tides of aìr move; and the emto br RC pires of men move; and the world of thòught moves ever | onRC

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ward | and ever | upward | to higher fácts and

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P (0) Hang up I that poor | little | spy-glass; it work.

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Franciscans and Dominicans may deride | thy discoveries | ƒ nôw; (A 0) but the time will come | when from two | hundred | observatories, | in Europe and America, | the glorious | artillery |

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ff of science | shall nightly assault the skies; but they shall gain no |

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conquests in those glittering fields, before which thîne shall be

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ƒ (0) Rest in peace, great | Columbus of the heavens! like

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BC W m B C W m BC hìm | scorned, | persecuted, | broken-hearted.

In other ages, in

distant hemispheres, when the votaries of science, with solemn | acts

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of consecration, shall dedicate their stately edifices to the cause of

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knowledge and of truth, | thŷ name | shall be mentioned | with hònor.

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Moderately Slow Movement, § 225.

85 The Baron's Last Banquet
86 Horatius at the Bridge
87 The Sailor Boy's Dream
88 The Relief of Lucknow
89 Charge of the Light Brigade,
90 The Bugle Song

91 The Dying Christian to his
Soul

92 The Burial of Moses

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66

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289

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A. G. Greene,

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T. B. Macaulay,

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Dimond,

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94 Avalanches of Jungfrau Alp,

Robert Lowell,
Alfred Tennyson, 298
Alfred Tennyson, 299

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